Beginning with the death of Pres. Malam Bacai Sanhá in January, Guinea-Bissau’s chronic instability grew worse in 2012. The country, one of the poorest in the world, with almost 7 out of 10 people living on less than $2 a day and surviving only by farming, had become a key hub in a very lucrative drug trade that smuggled cocaine from Latin America via western Africa to Europe. The country’s military was deeply involved in the trade. In April 2012 the chief of staff of the armed forces, Gen. Antonio Indjai, led a coup against Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Júnior, who had emerged as the front-runner in the first round of the presidential election in March and had talked of downsizing the military and working to end its involvement in the drug trade. Ironically, in late 2011 Indjai had arrested a former ally, Rear Adm. José Americo Bubo Na Tchuto—a former navy chief and reputed drug kingpin—for an unsuccessful coup attempt in December. The 2012 coup leaders formed a civilian transitional government, without Gomes Júnior or Pereira, both of whom were taken into custody and held for two weeks before being released. In October soldiers attacked an army barracks in what the transitional government claimed was a failed coup attempt. The leader of the raid and several of his accomplices were later arrested. Meanwhile, drug trafficking in Guinea-Bissau was reported to have increased significantly since the April coup.

The Economic Community of West African States imposed sanctions, but the military remained in power. ECOWAS later mediated an agreement with the country’s military and political parties, which paved the way for the creation in May of a civilian transitional administration, although it was effectively under the control of the military. Indjai ordered Tchuto’s release in June, after which he left for medical attention in Senegal. Attempts to investigate previous political and military killings went nowhere.

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May 5, 1947 Darsalame, Portuguese Guinea [now in Guinea-Bissau] Jan. 9, 2012 Paris, France Guinea-Bissauan politician who brought a certain level of stability to his country when he was elected president in the aftermath of the March 2009 assassination of Pres. João Bernardo Vieira....

country of western Africa. Situated on the Atlantic coast, the predominantly low-lying country is slightly hilly farther inland. The name Guinea remains a source of debate; it is perhaps a corruption of an Amazigh (Berber) word meaning “land of the blacks.” The country also uses the...

African organization established by the Treaty of Lagos in May 1975 to promote economic trade, cooperation, and self-reliance. The organization seeks to harmonize agricultural policies and to facilitate the free movement of peoples, services, and capital between members. The original 15 members...